Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Long-Term Offender Robert Semchuk To Live In B.C. Halfway House Under Seven Strict Conditions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 May, 2015 01:12 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A designated long-term offender who stabbed a 60-year-old woman outside a Kamloops, B.C., hospital has been ordered to live in a halfway house for the foreseeable future.
     
    The Parole Board of Canada has ordered Robert Semchuk to live under seven strict conditions after his prison sentence expired Tuesday.
     
    The board's written decision says the 51-year-old remains at a high risk to re-offend.
     
    Semchuk will be bound by conditions that require him not to consume drugs and alcohol and avoid people involved with criminal activity.
     
    He must also participate in mental-health counselling, take medication as prescribed and avoid contact with any of his victims.
     
    In 2009, a B.C. Supreme Court judge named Semchuk a long-term offender and sentenced him to a nine-year prison term, which was shortened to six years with credit for time served.
     
    The Crown had applied to have Semchuk labelled a dangerous offender, a tag that would have seen him jailed indefinitely.
     
    In 2006, Semchuk attacked and stabbed a woman outside Royal Inland Hospital before fleeing with her purse in a stolen car.
     
    He was arrested following a police pursuit stretching from Kamloops to Merritt to Peachland.
     
    Less than a year after his arrest, Semchuk was charged with assault causing bodily harm for attacking a corrections officer at Kamloops Regional Correctional Centre.
     
    Semchuk was in segregation at the time and the officer was taking the handcuffed prisoner to another area in the jail. After head-butting the guard, Semchuk was tackled by four other officers.
     
    He was handed an additional 18 months in jail for the attack and ordered to spend another 30 days in segregation.
     
    Semchuk had been on parole since March 2013 and living at a Lower Mainland halfway house, where he had two run-ins with his supervisors. In one case, he failed to take his medication and in another he was late returning home.
     
    Parole documents say Semchuk was “warned and counselled" after those incidents.
     
    Authorities will meet to review Semchuk’s progress every three months for the next 10 years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justice Marshall Rothstein To Retire From Supreme Court Of Canada In August

    Justice Marshall Rothstein To Retire From Supreme Court Of Canada In August
    OTTAWA — Justice Marshall Rothstein is retiring from the Supreme Court of Canada effective Aug. 31, just months short of his mandatory retirement on his 75th birthday in December.

    Justice Marshall Rothstein To Retire From Supreme Court Of Canada In August

    Go-Slow Strategy In Play At Duffy Trial Seems To Frustrate Presiding Judge

    Go-Slow Strategy In Play At Duffy Trial Seems To Frustrate Presiding Judge
    Justice Charles Vaillancourt says after 14 days of arguments and testimony, he's only just beginning to see the broad brush strokes of the issues at hand.

    Go-Slow Strategy In Play At Duffy Trial Seems To Frustrate Presiding Judge

    More Residents Set To Leave Northern Ontario Community Threatened By Flood

    More Residents Set To Leave Northern Ontario Community Threatened By Flood
    Chief Derek Stephen says 600 vulnerable residents of Kashechewan on the western shore of James Bay are the first to be evacuated.

    More Residents Set To Leave Northern Ontario Community Threatened By Flood

    Airpark Owner Says He Warned Pilot About Engine Before Highway 91 Landing

    Airpark Owner Says He Warned Pilot About Engine Before Highway 91 Landing
    Arnold Klappe of King George Airpark says he and his mechanic told Paul Deane-Freeman about the condition of his plane's engine on several occasions, and even priced out the parts needed to fix it.

    Airpark Owner Says He Warned Pilot About Engine Before Highway 91 Landing

    6.1 Magnitude Earthquake Hits British Columbia's North Coast, No Tsunami

    6.1 Magnitude Earthquake Hits British Columbia's North Coast, No Tsunami
    The 6.1 magnitude earthquake struck the Haida Gwaii region approximately 167 km southeast of the Village of Queen Charlotte at about 7 a.m. Friday.

    6.1 Magnitude Earthquake Hits British Columbia's North Coast, No Tsunami

    High Court OKs Extradition Of Two To Face Cold Case Murder Charges

    High Court OKs Extradition Of Two To Face Cold Case Murder Charges
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has cleared the way for two men to be extradited to New Hampshire to face trial in a decades-old double murder.

    High Court OKs Extradition Of Two To Face Cold Case Murder Charges